 
A high-level official of the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) explained 
why the robust growth of China's economy has not brought along a corresponding 
growth in employment during an interview with the Xinhua News Agency on Monday.
Although the unidentified official's technical jargon rendered his 
interpretation difficult to comprehend, the explanation itself indicates that 
the authorities have begun to realize the seriousness of the problem.
Theoretically, economic growth will yield more job opportunities. China has 
achieved an eye-catching rate of growth, but people do not perceive an 
improvement in their employment situations: half of new university graduates 
cannot find a job; rural migrant workers roam city streets looking for whatever 
can earn them bread; and State-owned enterprises lay off more and more workers.
It should be noted that the employment rate has kept rising as the national 
economy developed over the 28 years since China commenced its economic reform 
drive. While the gross domestic product (GDP) soared from 364.5 billion yuan 
(US$45.6 billion) in 1978 to 18.23 trillion yuan (US$2.28 trillion) in 2005, the 
number of employed rose from 401 million to 758 million.
Then why do people still feel that jobs are hard to come by?
One simple reason is that China's total population has risen too quickly, and 
every year a large army of fresh labourers is plunged into the market. This 
argument is right.
Another phenomenon, however, merits our attention: The speed of job increase 
is obviously incongruous with the growth rate of GDP.
In the past few years, China's GDP has been growing at a rate of between 9 
per cent and 10 per cent, but the rate of employment growth has remained around 
4 per cent. Longer-term statistics also indicate the same trend (although the 
method of statistics calculation may have been inconsistent). In the 1980s, a 
1-percentage-point increase in GDP would generate 0.453 per cent more jobs. The 
jobs figure plunged to 0.11 per cent in the 1990s, and further dropped to 0.098 
per cent in the first four years of the new century.
Such a dichotomy in growth rates between GDP and employment is strikingly 
abnormal. Something must have gone wrong in our economic development.
The NBS official proffered various explanations, such as the "dual-element 
structure of urban and rural economies," the "upgrading of the economic 
structure," the "declining of the primary industry," the "contradiction between 
labour quality and market needs," et cetera, et cetera.
However, he seems to have neglected a very important reason, which is 
conspicuous and easy to settle, if the competent authorities are determined 
enough.
The brisk development of China's manufacturing and service industries in the 
past decade or so was based on "high efficiency" in the use of labour. In these 
industries, most "low efficiency" State-owned enterprises have been shut down or 
transformed into private ones, leaving many workers "laid off." Private and 
foreign-invested enterprises' exertion of the labour force has almost gone to 
extremes in order to cut the cost to the minimum possible level.
"Extra work hours" are common in almost all these enterprises with little or 
even no pay.
In the Pearl River Delta region in South China's Guangdong Province, normal 
work shifts without "extra hours" have become "abnormal." Employees, mostly 
migrants from other provinces, in the toy, shoe, garment or electronics plants 
usually have to work extra hours "voluntarily" because the work quota is too 
heavy and they don't want to lose their jobs. There have been several reports of 
employees dying because of overwork.
White-collar workers are faced with the same situation. My niece works at a 
company in the Jianguomen area of Beijing, an area well known for its 
concentration of foreign companies. She never comes home at the normal hour for 
supper. I asked her if her boss wanted her to work extra hours. "The boss never 
requested so. I have to do it, otherwise I will not finish the work. Everybody 
in the office does the same," she replied. Other friends of mine who work in 
these companies told the same story.
Raising work efficiency is one of the goals of our reform and is absolutely 
justifiable. But what the bosses in these plants and companies are doing has 
gone beyond the legal, and ethical, boundary.
In a certain sense, the growth of GDP in many localities is achieved at the 
cost of employment and workers' health and rights.
The contradiction between efficiency and employment should be properly 
handled. Workers themselves cannot help it. It is the State's responsibility to 
make a law guaranteeing a reasonable relationship between efficiency and 
employment.
Only in this way can the employment rate rise in synchronization with the 
growth of GDP.
Email: liushinan@chinadaily.com.cn 
(China Daily 08/30/2006 page4)